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Shared genetic etiology between alcohol dependence and major depressive disorder.

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TLDR
The findings replicate the reported genetic overlap between AD and MDD and also suggest the need for improved, rigorous phenotyping to identify true shared cross-disorder genetic factors.
Abstract
The clinical comorbidity of alcohol dependence (AD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) is well established, whereas genetic factors influencing co-occurrence remain unclear. A recent study using polygenic risk scores (PRS) calculated based on the first-wave Psychiatric Genomics Consortium MDD meta-analysis (PGC-MDD1) suggests a modest shared genetic contribution to MDD and AD. Using a (~10 fold) larger discovery sample, we calculated PRS based on the second wave (PGC-MDD2) of results, in a severe AD case–control target sample. We found significant associations between AD disease status and MDD-PRS derived from both PGC-MDD2 (most informative P-threshold=1.0, P=0.00063, R2=0.533%) and PGC-MDD1 (P-threshold=0.2, P=0.00014, R2=0.663%) meta-analyses; the larger discovery sample did not yield additional predictive power. In contrast, calculating PRS in a MDD target sample yielded increased power when using PGC-MDD2 (P-threshold=1.0, P=0.000038, R2=1.34%) versus PGC-MDD1 (P-threshold=1.0, P=0.0013, R2=0.81%). Furthermore, when calculating PGC-MDD2 PRS in a subsample of patients with AD recruited explicitly excluding comorbid MDD, significant associations were still found (n=331; P-threshold=1.0, P=0.042, R2=0.398%). Meanwhile, in the subset of patients in which MDD was not the explicit exclusion criteria, PRS predicted more variance (n=999; P-threshold=1.0, P=0.0003, R2=0.693%). Our findings replicate the reported genetic overlap between AD and MDD and also suggest the need for improved, rigorous phenotyping to identify true shared cross-disorder genetic factors. Larger target samples are needed to reduce noise and take advantage of increasing discovery sample size.

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Effect of vortioxetine in subjects with major depressive and alcohol use disorders: a 6-month retrospective analysis.

TL;DR: Given its effectiveness on mood, cognition, and functioning, its good safety and tolerability profile, and low potential for abuse, vortioxetine could represent a valid pharmacological intervention in MDD + AUD patients as part of an integrated therapeutic-rehabilitation program.
Dissertation

Autobiographical memory and early-onset depression : insights from the environment, genetics and brain structure

Naomi Warne
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Journal ArticleDOI

The phenomics and genetics of addictive and affective comorbidity in opioid use disorder.

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References
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Journal Article

Is there a genetic relationship between alcoholism and depression

TL;DR: The Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA) seeks to identify genes contributing to alcoholism and related traits (i.e., phenotypes), including depression as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between alcoholism and unipolar depression : a controlled family study

TL;DR: Comorbidity between the two disorders was more common than expected by chance, but excess comorbidities was preferentially mediated by non-familial factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Specificity of familial vulnerability for alcoholism versus major depression in men.

TL;DR: The data are most consistent with a mechanism of reciprocal causation, whereby MD increases risk for AD and AD increases risk of MD, and a model in which genetic and environmental influences on each disorder were correlated could not be definitively rejected.
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- 26 Apr 2018 -